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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1920-4-29, Page 7s.4 What t Put &it the Hwy --- Shari it Re Carpete Bilge Treatment of HOOre. " dueklinge in leincleye to two weeke. • Conneeifeleeete-Te w , ;we e- vent et night, will fatten healthy r -o:, -7--,.„71,77:71-.-i,;',7,7-- -If yeti ere to keep ducks in 51111111Kr• 0,' q for breeding, give them n !era ' se run cCa it - and do not feed any fattening food. "-.., -: Whether or not one can make a .--ie - te, Cle. 0 13y ADELINE B, WHITFORD, profit on duelee depends on whether Many of us still remember the old and why the owner of any Bort wood there is a good market within com- brussels and ingrain carpets which fleor is advised to paint it it medium parat•ively easy ehipping distance, or Were sewed ancl fitted to the Toom's dark color rather then to use the right at hand, Deckfot the table s exact raeaeurements, pulled—etretch- light yellovv paint and varnish wItich, are pewee's relielted, however, if prop - ed to their utmost—and taelcecl down; t 1 I onl °erne imitates "light eriY fattened and afford a weleome The Boy Samuel -1 Sam. 1 : 24-28; :3: 1-21. Bolden Text, Prose 23; 26. senee (11,1 not ye: emote the Ienel. Eli, . a ..• • p to the proptaitie ministry, aril in that 22-8 cups powdered lug r 1 left to gather sie: or twelve menthe' out of the wiedone of a long life, inter- p dirt, and teen lifted, beaten, am' laid 1,: 24-28. Lent to the Lore. 'The preted rightly the strange riew ex- P :Lenin, year after year; moth -gather- eon of a pious inether, the child of perionee through which the soul of the Pd ing, diffieult to eweep, and seldom Pei P 0 • INTERNATIONAI, LESSON. MAY 2. 1e j, ret,10. 11.14 1,4641 quickly to his l't^104,1 .3 friend :oil tenthere g orm doe Me. el mei yet mcitin ,bow efeige, f• r el be eieelec" to ?eel egale, ' el ranen 1 nut ;:••. I 114 leave leeeen, et , neree of; enei ee the ice( et cl(.1 .)•e fereel, iii w m ;eek t wee rerview len he et, Ileimeheld Weights: end Measeree, • Tee follewieg eomparlemis of (men - titles may prove ueeful to the house- wife: (All remacierements are Wien levee) 3 t ete 31 tbsp, (dry roceitl'ribsp iali 1 e 14 t c 1 e ) 2 gape butter, palled 440116, .1 nel ;yruneved any no elation up up d. pa. p41. d. d. d. d. 1 o z. 1 z. p td from (led, Ile luel reit yet been called 2 clipa meat, finely ehopped 2 came sugar I. oalc." And in peeeing, I may add that addition to the home bill of fare, MS is true also of the finieb of stand- ing woodwork. An honent paint isl Have You a Garden? far better and, if well thou as to Are you one of those farmers who *color is far more artistic: than the live -on Ntegetables all the year 2 2-3 ups brown sngar .. • ...1 2 2-3 cups oatmeal 43-4 cups rolled oats 1 4 cups flew. 1 We have learned much Rime those grained imitations of hard wood. round? A man may be justified in really clean, dive, and 110 one who has once tried Oak ;s about the only hard wood devoting his whole farm to Borne more rugs on Imre floors was ever known flooring weld) will take stain well,' profitable crops and buying his horse to go back to the full-sized carpets. maple and bard pine being too close feed, but be is never justified in cheat - True, one has to think now of the in grain to hold any preparation ex- ing his family out of fresh vegetables finish of the floor as well AS of the eepting possibly an acid stain, and when a half -acre and a few hours' this treatment is not often used by an inexperienced worker. It in possible to use lighter !loon in bedrooms, with light -toned rugs, rug expense, and it takes time an study to hunt up materials, and de- cide upon the suitable colorings and quality, but it pays to do the work thoroughly, for when once the retinae light Standing woodwork. and delicate- a better garden than thousands of floor end rug problem Is well settled, ly toned :walls, but even otherwise well regulated farms. here the floor, the re•eult outlasts the life eof any ancl ruga must be dark enough to hold How many farmers there are who ordinary old-tbne carpet, and in the rues down, do not know the taste of asparagus, cleapliness and artistic charm given (empeting Makes, Inexpensive Rugs. and yet there is not a more delicious, healthful or more easily grown even greater value, So much for our floors and the' elleYe: vegetable, It Uquires little space and Treetment of Old Floors. finish we may give them, Mit the' In old houses the 04.001 objection greater (mention to -day is what to U58 WM produce year alter year with very 1 little care. It seems especially good to rugs a, that the floors are too poor for rugs. because it com.es so early in the spring for flniehing. Sometimes this is true, 'When there is need for a simple' hue often a good lot of crack filler but ineepeneive floor eovering, no -I before any other vegetables are to be and hard work will make a very Xs- thing is better than to have a rug: had. Horseradish and pieplant are emtraging floor into a fairly geed made op from two other perennials which should carpeting bought by, tho ;yard. Imagine a brown floor with. never be left out. Of emu everyone eurfece. _, le wide imaals ere worped end roll a rug of emen ingrain carpet, lie ehas a strawberry bed, some currants, Tins' gooseberry and raspberry bushes and up 13(414' the e(141.,; they may be Plain gray, tan or Imam color. pieene down (envoys seeing to it, of with -nutted toned walls would give maybe some cultivated blackberries. Celery is another vegetable which omen.: that nails are firs!: driven eeerY ehalle a 2 or the use of strong mean is sadly neglected, Almost eny gar - down ralthOr than 13114 plane will run) color and deeign. in draperies, den will procluce acceptable celery. and fi r the extiemely wide creeks it ions mid small furnishings, and the 1 Nor es it as much trouble as most 10 powilele to get any carpenter to ' • 'f 't ' line b 4.113) thin soft pine strips, et to ee ef an :inch in thickness, and the re may be driven in and then Menai down to the level of the floor. Seth thin 4 triee may also be driven teeter the mop -boards when the floor tou e -, and 1110larp . ie erewn :rely from them; though a average large patterned ready-made mete, laid %eerier round woubl be etlg. There is this objection to the better net Omen all ciround the floor • ingraiii rug that it .is too light in edge mei peinted or stained the floor weight to lay well, but this may be te7ce. The filling up of all shabby oyereeete by sewing a small brass care will give them all they can eat, And yet—it is a shame to have to say it, but it is true-gthere is many a fifty -foot lot in the city that boasts prayer, Samuel wag consecrated from boy was passeig. It was the vele° of 9 or 10 eggs his birth to the special service of God. The lad who bad been so 2 tbsp. butter Jehovah. First of all, in fulfilment thoughtful and attentive in his duty 4 tbsp. flour - of his mother's vow, he was to be a tO all earthly master is now called to 1 egg, slightly beaten Nazarite (v. 11). Tho Nazarite (see a higher service and a higher duty, 1 lemon (juice) 9-10. "Speak Lord, for Thy servant buret')." This is the :word both of faith and of obedience. The Voice, unheard by any one but 'Samuel him - from touching a dead body, and from, shaving or cutting the hair. The vow message. From that moment, Yeillng self, reveals a truth and gives him a was, we may believe, a protest against as he was, he was a prophet of God. drunkenness and certain other forms 11-14. Against Ell, No doubt the of vice, which prevailed at Canaanite pure mind of the boy had revolted at altars, and which were being imitated the vile conduct of the sons of Eli, at the altars of Jehovah. and he had wondered why his master, In the second place, Samuel was who was both priest and judge, did dedicated to the service of God in the not deal marc sternly with them, He sanctuary at Shil:oh, where he was to must also have known that a pro- -be in the care of, and to be instructed phet's warni.ng had already been ad - by, the chief priest, Eli, a descendant dressed to Eli regarding the same of the priestly family of Aaron. On matter. See 2: 12-17, 22-25, 27-36. the occasion of his coming to Eli gifts Now, in his vision +of the night, he were 'brought and a bullock was slain is made to understand that this in - in sacrifice, as a dedicatory offering iquity can not and will not go un - Thus solemnly was be "lent to the punished. The day of .terrible retri- Lerd," bution is speedily aiming. So terrible 3: 1. Ministered to the Lord, He will it bo that both the ears of every acted as attendant or servant to Eli ono that heareth it shall tingle. The and was in training foe the priesthood. Lord will make an end of the house, The linen ephod which he wore (2: 18) of Eli. He knew the iniquity of his was the distinctive garment of the sons; he had the power to put a stop to it; but like a too indulgent father, he had only mildly reproved them. Hes sons 'made themselves vile and he re- strained them not. No mere sacrifice or offering to Jehovah could make up for such neglect of righteousness. God is pleased only with the clean hands and the pure heart. 15-18. Samuel feared. It is to the boy's credit that he was not over hasty to bear such a message to his patron and friend. But at Eli's com- mand he told him every whit. There is scarcely anything in the entire his- tory more pathetic than the humility of the old man, receiving this rebuke from the hies of his pupil and submit- ting himself to the hand of God. It was not long until the blow fell, and at the tragic news ef his son's death in :battle, Eli himself died of a broken heart. No harp with its duket, golden string, Nor lute nor lyre with liquid ring, Is sweet as the robin's song. Num. 6) appears to have been subject to such a vow, either for life, or for a certain limited time, during which he was required to abstain from wine, es ce , good_ . Or, . priesthood. It is worthy of note that not easy to find ingrains of no pattern' People seeneto.think. There are sate- Samuel did not belong to the tribe of fac.tory varieties on the mark. et now at all, it may be possible to get those,1 or the brussels, in very close alleoe„' which do not have to be hilled up which required all priests to be of that Levi (see 1; 1), and therefore the law patterns, and these, too; will makelila need not be tribecannot yet have been in ferce I leivilelre5c1ellr days, I beb ' d • • ' up at all. It can urie m good sewed rugs (without a border, of,It is also clear that the writer of the ,e , the cellar before frost strikes it and history regarded the ministry of the used far into the winter. What is a child, as really as that of the high salad without celery, and how much priest, as a service rendered to the soup is improved by a few dried leaves Lord, for flavoring. The word of the Lord was precious, Beets, carrots, cabbages, parsnips, or rather was rare, M those days. That rutabagas and turnips can all be used is to say, that there were few pro - as fresh vegetables in the winter in phets. The words open vision mean the same way. Maybe everyone knows either frequent or widely spread pro - that, but there are thousands veho phetic gift. It was not until the time putty does, when they dry) will flee": never do it. ereatly improve the Reel. eurface, and Small Rugs Best for Bedrooms. of Samuel that prophets became num- Beans, spinach, tomatoes, peas, corn erous, and came to be recognized as Ibis work 4.1100141 at least be done The home-made rug 444415 never mei and cucumbers are no longer the lux- the religious teachers and leaders of gs, either with strips 00 the new creek fillers (which are called clastic becau e they do not shrink, ring at each corner, to slip over a large headed tack which has been driven down not quite flesh with the around the floor edges of the room popular than naw, and the woman jI ury of a few short days M the summer and far enough in to give a border of fortunate who can make a well- as they were once. Through the de - from one to two and a half feet when shaped, braided or pulled rug. In these velopment of early and late varieties, a judicious series of plantings and the room. easy, safe methods of canning now in In beeroomshowever, one large rug use they have become a year -around is usually not as desirable as several from r)me- make drawn rugwonder- foo entailer ones, and here the whole floor fully well—not by reproducing the old d. If youye have a good garden u can s should be smoothed and filled. dog or flower design, but by making truthfully say that you live on a farm; Very old floors should bo finished rather plain centres, and following a if you have not you only exist there. You might just as well be in the city. Have you ordered any new flowers this year? Try one or two new ones used for the zeeend coat. Let the first two or three shades, or blue to be every year—there are thousands of emit dry well 1 .,fore putting on the twee on a tan ground with dark blue them—and you will have lots of fun second, and let tele, too, become thole and brown edging the border, or any watching them and will soon develop oughly hard Mire using. It is a poor other simple combination, and then a splendid variety. ' plan to hurry any job of wood finish- ' dye the rags for it, doing the rug the rug is to cover the centre of the days of easily used dyes and good stencil patterns, any woman who can find some old-time expert to learn with Iwo oats of paint, and for simple :stencil border, especially gond results add a little To week up a rug of this kind one good hard flue varnish to the paint thould first plan a coke scheme, say Mg, whore pant or varnish is used.: 1 itself ae pick-up work. If an old :floor of hand wcod and not:' In the old-fashioned braided rugs, ram', it is refinished by first 03-3 100, there is a better result if care is moving all of the old varnish or wax, taken to choose good colors, and there RIM then using a mixture of raw line! are little tricks of bringing out some Israel. 2-8. In the temple. This was the old temple of Shiloh, which was short- ly after destroyed by the Philistines. Eli was advanced in years and his eyes had begun to wax dim (Revised Version). This is stated as the reason for Samuel's solicitude and attention. When he heard the voice he supposed it to be that of his master who re- quired his assestance. The lamp was lighted in the even- ing and burned all night in the sanc- tuary (Exod27: 20-21; 30: 7-8). 4-8. "Here am I." Samuel is pre- sented here in a very attractive light. Fertilizing Potatoes • • By Prof. Henry G. Bell. the row and works it in beside the seed piece. Fertilizer is soluble plant - food and is quickly taken up by the young potato plant as soon as the roots get well started. Some potato growers prefer applying two-thirds of the fertilizer broadeast, that is, they drill it in through the fertilizer drop- per of the grain drill before the po- tatoes are planted, at the same time they put on from 200 to 300 lbs. of fertilizer with the potato planter. This gives a wider distribution of the If you do not have either a grain drill or potato planter, strike out the furrows for the potatoes and sow the fertilizer along the furrow. Follow this by putting in a light covering of soil before you drop the pieces of potato, after which proceed es usual. Do not let a piece of po- tato fall directly on top of the fertil- izer oe injury will be done to the seed piece, This :precaution is taken care of in the potato planter, Profits.—Yields and profits are closely allied. Investigation among the New jersey potato growers brings this out very clearly as the following table shows: Relation of Potato Yields to Labor Income on 140 Potato Farms: Av. Yld., Acre. Average Busliele. No, Farms, Lab. Incomes 41.1 4 $ 178. 67.7 22 339 76.9 41 587 86,2 44 815 66.6 80 1,066 106.9 8 1,693 Other Information That Counts,— Besides fertilization, the soil should be thoroughly tilled, should contain an abundant supply of humus, and potatoes of high yielding type should :be planted. Nu/mem diseases and insects prey upon the potato. These must bo controlled by splaying if best results are to be obtained. Be Beady.—Potato planting will soon be hue. Be prepared to take advantage of the earliest opportunity. If you have not already purchased your stippliee of seed, and spray material, tee that these are ob- tained at the earliest date possible and stored in your barn, to that not a minute may. be lost When conditions become proper for 'notate plantieg, Most profitable results are obtained by peeper soil management, plant - food comply and crop handling, seed nil and turpeetine in equal parts.' design by the 4423) in which the braids Potato Important.—Potato Give the wood all it will absorb of ' are joined. For instance, little arrow yields depend very largely on plant - this, rubbing et on with one cloth and heads come out in the pattern if one food supply. Extensive investigation wip:ng dry with another. Or the floor braids with two strands of a dark in farm management - among 400 may have a coot of shellac and then' color and one strand of a: shade much potato farms in New Jersey shows one of varnieb; or be rubbed with lighter, and then lays the braids to- that "profits are 'greater with each floor WAX instead of -a varnish. This', gether with the light parts touching increase of potato yiela per acre. Men each otlmer, and horses handle as many crop acres In any attempt to make braided or on the heavy -yielding farms as upon pulled rugs, all of the materials should the light -yielding ferms." These find- be colored and sewed before the rug ings are of specealinterest to Ontario. work begins; and there should be, potatogrowers since potato prices kitchens or bathrooms as a waxed somewhere near, the helpful advice of rule high. Cost of production is also floor often shows water spots. an experienced old-time worker, to very high. Why not make your farm knowing that we should avoid all tell how to give a good firm workman- and labor count for all possible in strong contrasts in the coke:Inge of lilce tinkle to the hand -craft; for it es your potato yields this year? the large surfaces in our rooms, 100 always this which makes the home -1 Exeeriences.—Aetuel experiences will see to it that the floor color and made article meteor to the one made will interest you. The first is in the rug are equally dark. A clerk rug in the factory. ft can have no trueDundas County where Mr. Jos. on a light floor downetairs, and light art value unless it has excellence inl Laughlin tried out fertilizers of dif- colored rugs on dark floors upstairs, its finish. 1 ferent quantities with and without are common mistakes, which, in each Woven rag rugs are still very manure, on a typical potaito soil, give ease, snake the floor colors conspicu- ous and the room appear much small- er, The rug and floor do not need, of course, to be of the same color, but a medium dark green rug on a medium dark oak or a brown painted floor will make a room appear richer and larger than if the same rug were bordered by a strong contrast of light yellow flooring. This: statement es not made for the purpose of condemning all rooms hav- ing light floors of hard wood (for these of course are genuine and foe- tunately, their colors will darken) but simply to show why artists advice) staining a new oak floor to a medium dark tone before Shellacking Bailie, Yields last is an excellent finish for new floors as well, and if the wax is ap- plied two or three times a year the floor becomes in time very beautiful, but this treatment cannot be used in popular, and these, like the others, may be very :attractive if the dyeing and rag -sewing is well planned. We cannot lay too much stress on fertilized yielded 161 bee, of potatoes choosing rags in relation to the color per acre; 700 lbs. of 4-8-4 yielded 200 scheme of the other furnishing e so that the effect •of the whole may be harmonious, No article on floor coverings should ignore the needs of the kitchen. Here nothing -is better than the raw linseed oil and turpentine for wiping hard wood; the two coats of paint and a waterproof varnish finish for soft wood, or a covering of the whole floor with one of the good quality linoleum, or a substitute lower in price, of which there are Rural. ing the whole field equal attention, outside of the fertilizer. He reports the following yields: 300 lbs, of 4-8-4 4or liooditY It requires lour weeks to incubate duck eggs, and hens, ducks or Mao - can be used. On all large duck farms incubators are need exclusively. The brooding may -be dote in either of these ,three ways but, like the in- cubating:, is clone artificially when large numbers are handled. The same methods of brooding that apply to chicks can be used for ducklings, bet the feed must be diffeeent, Ducklings require mash feed, starting, with bread moistened with milla containing a aitile gritinui a little fine chareoal, ,hanging to a :mix- ture of one pare cornmeal, two parte bran, mixed enunbly with water and also containing a little grit and ther- eon]. After the ducklings are a month old they can have a little hard grain once a day, but until they are well grown t110 mash, which at the be- ginning was fed four or five times a day and the number of feeds subse- quently gravelly redeced, should be given twice each day, All ducks must be marketed when from eight to twelve weeks old be- cause that is the time when the pin feathers are least developed. Unless marketed when not over twelve weeks old they begin to grow a new eoat of feathers and begin to nese flesh., A ration of one part Wheat beet:in:one part beef scrap and three parts corne 013441, 13111186 Mentibly with milk be water, fed Woe a day, morning and noon, with a heaves; feed of cracked bus. per acre; 200 lbs. 4-8-4 plea 5 loads of manure yielded 233 bus. per acre; 400 lbs. of 4-8-4 plus 5 loads of manure yielded, 306 bus.; 10 loads of manure per acre yielded 187 bus.; no manure and no fertilizer yielded 80 bus, Mr. Laughlin reports his costs at $85,50 per acre. You can easily figure his prolite. He says, "We found the experiment very valuable indeed, so Much oto that we shall en - cleaver to secure feetilizer for some potato ground next year." What Fertilizers to Use.—Potatoes thrive on a sandy to gravelly loam soil. This is a type of soil that must be heavily fed, if it is to de its best. The potato crop also repays abundant feeding. Since potatoes contain so meth stamb, they are great lovers of potctsh, On normal potato soil with- out manure you should apply from .750 to 1000 lbs. of high grade fertil- izer per acre in order to get best results-. With a good dressing of maniree this application may be re- duced to 500 to 600 lbs, per acre. The analysis we would advise should range not less than 4 per cent, 5110- 111015115 6 to 8 per cent. phosphoric acid and 4 to 6 per cent potash. How to Apply Fertilizer.—Fertil- izer is best applied to potatoes by the especially constructed potnto planter. This machine drops the fertilizer 18 4 tbs e the ...",:evi*Jogy, Respect for the Child's Possessions It is no weeder that during infancy and early childhood We's leesone are difficult for the small beginner i when: the lawWhich -meets there" must seem to him just or unjust, con- eisten or inconsistent, according to, the knowledge or the capriceof the adult culministering them. One of the first leans which the little child should learn is the proper care of his oven possessions and res- pect fur those of others, and a mother has the first opportunity to ineuleate P. this importent life leeson. P, Since one of the strongest instincts of the child is to imitate, there :seems no more logical way to teach this les• son than by example. If a mother teaches her child not to touch the 00110100 10 her desk or dressing table without her permission, then has she the right to dispose of his toys with- out his pe.entission? The writer recalls an instance where a mother secretly put away a doll which had been given to her lit- tle girl, and for no reaeon except that the. child already had a number of dolls and this particular 4-411t WaH "too beautifully dressed to be ?Mew(' with urn' the chill Wae irelere' Arother common way of de:regal:en • Ing' eighteen's rightis forthem to give up emu riew or meth -prized pessansioe. For ll;Aio girl of ix. who was driiclited with tho gitt ef dolee fen. wee obligee by he, mether to heed it to her bn?,:i • in o1r.;er qu(et. 1) la his eyelle,f)erd hou;eil rrii5rd the tilly, toy, his :wronged, and little sister '1141 beeemalieeefeel Not eel the iinjuee end eller:le-riveted mother "saved the SCorte" riWcii she hal Impel to aver.- ln caeh of these usee cold slowed lame bee: comultee end hee permission p;iten beeore 214' 'aggro disposed el the plaything. In this way the Mother could have explained the reasons for her own Emden, and' the child, in her tent, would have had an opportunity of 64-ppessing, herself, a halat which ehould heereentnetewl. Then. too, personal reepewebeity her poe,,eeeior,e and the reasenieee tf the right of ownership woold haeo ennecaeized the difference between "mine" and "thine." There is no better wee mania habits of orderlinese and a reDse responsibility than by giving the Meld a place for keeping hie playteeige and then allowing him full eorerei or these possessions. Show him hew to use his becks, how to take care of his toye, now to protect his pets, arid then 0e8 to it that he eas ce. shelf or a small besik- case for his books, e play corner for his toys. acid an areeropriaee homn for his pets. After playteree eequire bee to pot away whateter he has bees teeieer, and let bile understand wile necessity for regular attentite to toe pcts., e Such training w!il of neemoity . upon bis charateer Mtn 10 ((1$t!74 entails respor.11eie ,ility. Os ':79300 e'en teaches generegley, for 911111011 304- seselons how cue a Ad.; ts share? It may not be out et ulaee in :Mei a ing parents to respect their ‘liiidren's, possessions to add a warping ea ten half of the children. Do net serene.]:- 1115111 with numbeelees readS-made toys. Give [30115bloelee imertle, nails, a few trek, hammere, eteve, planes, spook, 131'!44401'4, threae, cloth, dolls, papee, cray.--na, 21a3,, eP.nd, and: becks. They 40111 ill gee more happiness from the -se poseesesione of constructive pes- sibilit'es than from all the finished toy shone in the land, "Childhoeil hww es its oe ee or see - 1113). thinkieg, and feeling, and 015- 111110144 is more foolish time to try en substitute our own for theme' Respect ye:or child's right to hie possessions and -be will learn to re- spect the rights of othees and, with such recognition, there ten; bo no fear for the outcome of his place in so- ciety. 41,41 411110.11 [ Edge Before and After Stropping (Magnified). It's the stropping that counts ! 'Any razor is soon ruined by unskille;d Stropping. There is one and one only razor that sharpens itself — the AutoStrop Razor. You can't strop it wrongly— just slip the strop through the frame and a few strokes to and fro will renew the blade edge. 'Any dealer will demon- strate the AutoStrop Razor ptoricye. you, guarantee satisfac- tion, or refund of purchase Only $5.00 complete with strop and twelve blades in an attractive aesort- rnent of cases to suit any purpose. AutoStrop Safety Razor Co., Limited AutoStrop Building, Toronto, Canada 201 • te • ee"neeneenee, 1600611919114 POE 96 'enema II.AVZ 11110032[61:EMTED Spohn's Distemper Compound Ivor P/STEMPHR, INFLTJENZA, PINKIOSE; CI:MGR Or COLD. Twent -siX years' use mong the best horsemen in America has given the COMPOUND an enviable record es 14 preViv ente and cure. A. few drops daily will keep th Animal in oonditiOn and his system win resist disease Regular doses prescribed will env). Buy of your druggist SPOICN 3902DICAL 00., Iletr6., 006hon, Ind;. 011•8., Still highermrleed gasoline predicted for the summer. Keep your cost down by using on your ear a NO KNOCKS CAS SAVER It. gives 26% to 35% more mileage per gallon of gasoline; keeps your carbon troubles down; gives more power on hills: and your ear runs smoother and quieter. Saves Its prloe many times each season in use. Already on thousands of the higheet-priced ears, as well as lands, etc. PRICE $15.40 INSTALLED _Agents, dealers, garages, write for whole- sale prices, tonne, testimonials. ole. MADE IN CANADA and guaranteed by NO KNOCKS GAS SAVERS, 102 W. Richmond St., Toronto,. Cord or Fab* Always Near. A mile and a hale, or a day and a half, or a world and a half away. Your journey back, will be safe and sure if your car is equipped the Partridge way., —4 - Why the Little Dot Laughed. Little Bo -Peep, she lost her sheep, Couldn't tell where to find theme, So she sent out the call to look for them all— The sheep and their tails behind them, Then Jack and Jill went up the 11111 Determined for to find them; And Little Boy Blue he looked for them, too— But the sheep kept their talk he., hind them, Old Mother Hubbard went to the cepe board, If haply she might find them; But the cupboard was bare,—no mute ton was there,— Not even the tails behind them. Then the little dog laughed to tee such sport, ' For he was the one to And them; And up through the meadow he drove them home, Wagging his tail behiad theml Chosen seed will grow no weed. Soak hauditerthiete in a pall at ( salt and water before putting them • . into the ordinary wash watol. Inewch at emir own troubles, mew' -others, Troubles will be striaegtee teirou, Mtge be brothers.